5,617 research outputs found

    Sabina Murray, 30th Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    Sabina Murray is the award-winning author of the novels Slow Burn, and A Carnivore’s Inquiry, and the story collection The Caprices. A former Michener Fellow at the University of Texas and Bunting Fellow at the Radcliffe Institute of Harvard University, she received the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction in 2003. Murray’s stories have appeared in Ploughshares, Ontario Review, the New England Review, and other literary journals. Currently, she teaches in the MFA program at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst

    Sabina baccifera, Sabina sterile, Miride

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    1-2. Nome scientifico: Juniperus sabina L. (Cupressaceae) Nome attuale: Sabina, Ginepro sabino 3. Nome scientifico: Myrrhis odorata (L.) Scop. (Apiaceae, Umbelliferae) Nome attuale: Mirrid

    I remember Farm Center at Seabrook

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    In this "I remember" memoir, Sabina Slavic Woodward recalls how Charles Seabrook sent a representative to refugee camps in West Germany to recruit workers. Sabina's family signed up, and spent 10 days at sea. Many of the refugees were malnourished. During the first year at Seabrook, Sabina's family lived in Farm Center, which was a cramped living area that lacked privacy. Once her parents were able to gain more hours to earn more money, her family was able to move into a more suitable house. Tragically, in 1955, her older brother, Franz, drowned in a nearby lake. The Seabrook Educational and Cultural Center has been soliciting current and past residents of Seabrook Farms for an "I remember" project. Residents are asked to create narratives regarding their experiences at Seabrook Farms. These memories help preserve the history and multi-cultural heritage of Seabrook Farms

    Development and the G20

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    This publication examines what role the G20 can play in international development. Key findings: Development is a key component of the G20, but there are concerns over the effectiveness of the current development agenda. The criticism includes that the development agenda is too diffuse and mostly distant to the G20’s main activities. But the G20 development agenda has made progress in some important areas, including increasing the resources of the international financial institutions, infrastructure, food security, financial inclusion and reducing the cost of remittances. However development and global economic issues cannot be treated in isolation; development must be ‘mainstreamed’ and clearly seen as part of the G20’s core agenda. To the extent that Australia can help strengthen the G20 when it assumes the chair in 2014, and make tangible progress in such areas as - economic growth, financial regulation, trade, financial inclusion, infrastructure and climate change financing – it can make a significant contribution to promoting development and reducing poverty. Authored by Mike Callaghan AM, Annmaree O’Keeffe AM, Robin Davies, Susan Harris Rimmer , Steve Price-Thomas, Sabina Curatolo, Julia Newton-Howes and Michelle Lettie

    Sarah Sabina Kean to John Cox Morris, December 28, 1820

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    Sarah Sabina Kean wrote from Ursino to John Cox Morris, her brother, addressed to Butternuts, Otsego, NY. She updated him on her family and discussed Christmas and a James Fenimore Cooper book. People Included: Susan Ursin Niemcewicz, Peter Philip James Kean, John Kean, Julia Ursin Niemcewicz Kean, Sarah Louisa Jay Kean, Rutherford Family, Cormac Family, Mrs. N. Banchay, William Dayton, Mr. and Mrs. Rudd, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence, Aunt and Uncle Ricketts, Mr. and Mrs. James, Mrs. Palmer, Mrs. john Kearney, Eizabeth, Miss. Edgworth, Walter Rutherford, Mary Rutherford, Mrs. Barnabus, Jane, Jacob Morris, Lewis Lee Morris, General Jacob Morris, Mary Cox Morris Places Included: New York, NYhttps://digitalcommons.kean.edu/lhc_1820s/1056/thumbnail.jp

    Le necropoli preromane di Terni tra Archeologia e sviluppo industriale postunitario

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    This paper presents an analysis of an example of ante litteram preventive archaeology, connected to the discovery of the pre-Roman necropolis of Terni, with particular regard to the site of San Pietro in Campo. The excavation of the circa 120 tombs, most of which date to the Orientalising Period, took place in two distinct phases: the first excavation was carried out at the beginning of the 20th c. and the second one at the end of it. In this paper, the archaeological discoveries of the first campaign are presented against the backdrop of the cultural and historical environment of the Umbrian town between the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries, during which time it was characterised by an intense process of industrialization. Thanks to a systematic study of various sets of archival documents, it has been possible to, on the one hand sketch out a detailed picture of the complex and conflicting relationship between the development of the modern city and the rediscovery of pre-Roman tombs, while on the other hand recovering and analysing essential archaeological data belonging to contexts that would otherwise have been “lost”

    Correspondence from Unknown to Mrs. Chas. Morton (Sabina Page Pemberton Morton)

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    Typed and unsigned correspondence to Mrs. Chas. Morton (Sabina Page Pemberton Morton); first line reads: "My dear Mrs. Morton:/As I am needing the material loaned you, concerning the state of Washington, I will ask you to kindly send it by return mail." The author explains a mix-up that occurred in regard to their refusal to speak for a bill passed by the Federal Women's Equality Association [FWEA]. She explains that she is a member of the National Council of Women Voters and does not have time to join the FWEA, The Anthony League, or the group run by Miss Alice Paul (most likely the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage). She says that her refusal to speak for the FWEA was not a sign of "bad faith" and that she will support all of the previously mentioned groups when she has time to do so.Outgoing Correspondence from Dr. Clara W. MacNaughton to Various Recipient

    Sabina (Maria) La Saga aux champignons sacrés

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    Desroche Henri. Sabina (Maria) La Saga aux champignons sacrés. In: Archives de sciences sociales des religions, n°48/2, 1979. p. 343

    Sabina (Maria) La Saga aux champignons sacrés

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    Desroche Henri. Sabina (Maria) La Saga aux champignons sacrés. In: Archives de sciences sociales des religions, n°48/2, 1979. p. 343

    The composition of the leaf essential oils of J. sabina var. balkanensis: comparison between oils from central Italy with oils from Bulgaria, Greece and Turkey

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    The composition of the leaf oil of J. sabina var. balkanensis from central Italy was compared to volatile leaf oils from Bulgaria, Greece and Turkey, as well as J. sabina var. sabina from Switzerland, Pyrenees, and Kazakhstan. The leaf oils in central Italy had chemotypes with some plants of J. sabina var. balkanensis oils with high sabinene (HiSab, 28.4 - 40.2%), low trans-sabinyl acetate chemotype (LoTSac) and other plants with the low sabinene (LoSab, 9.6 - 14.8%), high trans-sabinyl acetate (HiTSac, 36.0 - 47.4%) chemotype. These same chemotype patterns were also found in Bulgaria, Greece, and Turkey. There appear to be no consistent chemical differences between the oils of var. balkanensis in Bulgaria, Greece, Turkey and the oil from central Italy. The lack of chemical differentiation between eastern (Bulgaria, Greece, Turkey) and western (Italy) var. balkanensis populations may reflect the recent origin of var. balkanensis or gene flow. Comparing the compositions of the leaf essential oils of central Italy (var. balkanensis) with oils of J. sabina var. sabina, from Pyrenees, and Switzerland revealed oils of J. s. var. balkanensis differ only slightly from J. s. var. sabina, Switzerland and Pyrenees. The presence of chemotypes in var. balkanensis populations make it very difficult to determine any differences among var. balkanensis populations and between var. balkanensis and var. sabina oils
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